How technology has changed what its like to be deaf Rebecca Knill

Transcriber: Joseph Geni
Reviewer: Krystian Aparta

My name is Rebecca, and I’m a cyborg.

(Laughter)

Specifically, I have 32
computer chips inside my head,

which rebuild my sense of hearing.

This is called a cochlear implant.

You remember the Borg from Star Trek,

those aliens who conquered and absorbed
everything in sight?

Well, that’s me.

(Laughter)

The good news is
I come for your technology

and not for your human life-forms.

(Laughter)

Actually, I’ve never seen
an episode of Star Trek.

(Laughter)

But there’s a reason for that:

television wasn’t closed-captioned
when I was a kid.

I grew up profoundly deaf.

I went to regular schools,
and I had to lip-read.

I didn’t meet another
deaf person until I was 20.

Electronics were mostly audio back then.

My alarm clock was my sister Barbara,

who would set her alarm
and then throw something at me to wake up.

(Laughter)

My hearing aids were industrial-strength,
sledgehammer volume,

but they helped me more
than they helped most people.

With them, I could hear music
and the sound of my own voice.

I’ve always liked the idea that technology
can help make the world more human.

I used to watch the stereo flash color
when the music shifted,

and I knew it was just a matter of time
before my watch could show me sound, too.

Did you know that hearing
occurs in the brain?

In your ear is a small organ
called the cochlea,

and the cochlea is lined with thousands
of receptors called hair cells.

When sound enters your ear,

those hair cells, they send
electric signals to your brain,

and your brain then
interprets that as sound.

Hair-cell damage is really common:

noise exposure, ordinary aging, illness.

My hair cells were damaged
before I was even born.

My mother was exposed to German measles
when she was pregnant with me.

About five percent of the world
has significant hearing loss.

By 2050, that’s expected to double
to over 900 million people,

or one in 10.

For seniors, it’s already
one out of three.

With a cochlear implant,

computer chips do the job
for the damaged hair cells.

Imagine a box of 16 crayons,

and those 16 crayons, in combination,

have to make all of the colors
in the universe.

Same with the cochlear implant.

I have 16 electrodes
in each of my cochleas.

Those 16 electrodes, in combination,
send signals to my brain,

representing all of the sounds
in the universe.

I have electronics inside
and outside of my head

to make that happen,

including a small processor,
magnets inside my skull

and a rechargeable power source.

Radio waves transmit sound
through the magnets.

The number one question that I get
about the cochlear implant

when people hear about the magnets

is whether my head sticks
to the refrigerator.

(Laughter)

No, it does not.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

Thank you, thank you.

(Applause)

I know this, because I tried.

(Laughter)

Hearing people assume that the Deaf

live in a perpetual state
of wanting to hear,

because they can’t imagine any other way.

But I’ve never once wished to be hearing.

I just wanted to be part
of a community like me.

I wanted everyone else to be deaf.

I think that sense of belonging
is what ultimately connects our stories,

and mine felt incomplete.

When cochlear implants first got going,

back in the ’80s,

the operation was
Frankenstein-monster scary.

By 2001, the procedure
had evolved considerably,

but it still wiped out
any natural hearing that you had.

The success rate then
for speech comprehension was low,

maybe 50 percent.

So if it didn’t work,
you couldn’t go back.

At that time, implants were also
controversial in the Deaf culture.

Basically, it was considered
the equivalent

of changing the color of your skin.

I held off for a while,

but my hearing was going downhill fast,

and hearing aids were no longer helping.

So in 2003, I made the tough decision
to have the cochlear implant.

I just needed to stop
that soul-sucking cycle of loss,

regardless of whether
the operation worked,

and I really didn’t think that it would.

I saw it as one last box to check off

before I made the transition
to being completely deaf,

which a part of me wanted.

Complete silence is very addictive.

Maybe you’ve spent time
in a sensory deprivation tank,

and you know what I mean.

Silence has mind-expanding capabilities.

In silence, I see sound.

When I watch a music video without sound,

I can hear music.

In the absence of sound,

my brain fills in the gaps
based on the movement I see.

My mind is no longer competing
with the distraction of sound.

It’s freed up to think more creatively.

There are advantages
to having bionic body parts as well.

It’s undeniably convenient
to be able to hear,

and I can turn it off any time I want.

(Laughter)

I’m hearing when I need to be,
and the rest of the time, I’m not.

Bionic hearing doesn’t age,

although external parts
sometimes need replacement.

It would be so cool

to just automatically regenerate
a damaged part like a real cyborg,

but I get mine FedExed
from Advanced Bionics.

(Laughter)

Oh, I get updates

downloaded into my head.

(Laughter)

It’s not quite AirDrop – but close.

(Laughter)

With the cochlear implant,

I can stream music from my iPod
into my head without earbuds.

Recently, I went to a friend’s
long, tedious concert …

(Laughter)

and unknown to anyone else,

I listened to the Beatles
for three hours instead.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

Technology has come so far so fast.

The biggest obstacle I face
as a deaf person

is no longer a physical barrier.

It’s the way that people respond
to my deafness,

the outdated way
people respond to my deafness –

pity, patronization, even anger –

because that just cancels out
the human connection

that technology achieves.

I once had a travel roommate
who had a complete temper tantrum,

because I didn’t hear her
knocking on the door

when her key didn’t work.

If I hadn’t been there, no problem,
she could get another key,

but when she saw that I was there,
her anger boiled over.

It was no longer about a key.

It was about deafness
not being a good enough reason

for her inconvenience.

Or the commercial about the deaf man

whose neighborhood surprised him
with sign language messages

from people on the street.

Everyone who sent me the video
told me they cried,

so I asked them,

“Well, what if he wasn’t deaf?

What if his first language was Spanish,

and everyone learned Spanish instead?

Would you have cried?”

And they all said no.

They weren’t crying because
of the communication barrier,

they were crying because the man was deaf.

But I see it differently.

What if the Borg showed up in that video,

and the Borg said,
“Deafness is irrelevant.”

Because that’s what they say, right?

Everything’s “irrelevant.”

And then the Borg
assimilated the deaf guy –

not out of pity, not out of anger,

but because he had
a biological distinctiveness

that the Borg wanted,

including unique language capabilities.

I would much rather see that commercial.

(Laughter)

Why does thinking about ability
make people so uncomfortable?

You might know a play, later a movie,

called “Children of a Lesser God,”

by Mark Medoff.

That play, that title,

actually comes from a poem
by Alfred Tennyson,

and I interpret both the play and title

to say that humans
who are perceived as defective

were made by a lesser God

and live an inferior existence,

while those made by the real God
are a superior class,

because God doesn’t make mistakes.

In World War II,

an estimated 275,000
people with disabilities

were murdered in special death camps,

because they didn’t fit Hitler’s vision
of a superior race.

Hitler said that he was inspired
by the United States,

which had enacted involuntary
sterilization laws for “the unfit”

in the early 1900s.

That practice continued
in more than 30 states until the ’70s,

with the last law
finally repealed in 2003.

So the world is not that far removed
from Tennyson’s poem.

That tendency to make assumptions
about people based on ability

comes out in sentences like

“You’re so special,”
“I couldn’t live like that”

or “Thank God that’s not me.”

Changing how people think
is like getting them to break a habit.

Before the implant, I had stopped
using the voice telephone

and switched to email,

but people kept leaving me voice mail.

They were upset
that I was unreachable by phone

and not returning messages.

I continued to tell them my situation.

It took them months to adapt.

Fast-forward 10 years,

and you know who else hated voice mail?

Millennials.

(Laughter)

And you know what they did?

They normalized texting
for communication instead.

Now, when it comes to ignoring voice mail,

it no longer matters whether you’re deaf
or just self-absorbed.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

Millennials changed
how people think about messaging.

They reset the default.

Can I just tell you
how much I love texting?

Oh, and group texts.

I have six siblings –

they’re all hearing,

but I don’t think any less of them.

(Laughter)

And we all text.

Do you know how thrilling it is

to have a visual means of communication
that everyone else actually uses?

So I am on a mission now.

As a consumer of technology,

I want visual options
whenever there’s audio.

It doesn’t matter whether I’m deaf

or don’t want to wake the baby.

Both are equally valid.

Smart designers

include multiple ways
to access technology,

but segregating that access
under “accessibility” –

that’s just hiding it
from mainstream users.

In order to change how people think,

we need to be more than accessible,

we need to be connected.

Apple did this recently.

On my iPhone, it automatically
displays a visual transcript

of my voice mail,

right next to the audio button.

I couldn’t turn it off
even if I wanted to.

You know what else?

Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime no longer say

“Closed-captioned
for the hearing impaired.”

They say “subtitles,” “on” or “off,”

with a list of languages
underneath, including English.

Technology has come so far.

Our mindset just needs to catch up.

“Resistance is futile.”

(Laughter)

You have been assimilated.

(Laughter)

Thank you.

(Applause)